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John McTaggart, Studies in Hegelian Dialectic. Chapter 1.
1. HEGEL'S primary object in his dialectic is to establish the existence of a logical connection between
the various categories which are involved in the constitution of experience. He teaches that this
connection is of such a kind that any category, if scrutinised with sufficient care and attention, is found to
lead on to another, and to involve it, in such a manner that an attempt to use the first of any subject while
we refuse to use the second of the same subject results in a contradiction. The category thus reached leads
on in a similar way to a third, and the process continues until at last we reach the goal of the dialectic in a
category which betrays no instability.
If we examine the process in more detail, we shall find that it advances, not directly, but by moving from
side to side, like a ship tacking against an unfavourable wind. The simplest and best known form of this
advance, as it is to be found in the earlier transitions of the logic, is as follows. The examination of a
certain category leads us to the conclusion that, if we predicate it of any subject, we are compelled by
consistency to predicate of the same subject the logical contrary of that category. This brings us to an
absurdity, since the predication of two contrary attributes of the same thing at the same time violates the
law of contradiction. On examining the two contrary predicates further, they are seen to be capable of
reconciliation in a higher category, which combines the contents of both of them, not merely placed sideby side, but absorbed into a wider idea, as moments or aspects of which they can exist without
contradiction.
This idea of the synthesis of opposites is perhaps the most characteristic in the whole of Hegel's system. It
is certainly one of the most difficult to explain. Indeed the only way of grasping what Hegel meant by it is
to observe in detail how he uses it, and in what manner the lower categories are partly altered and partly
preserved in the higher one, so that, while their opposition vanishes, the significance of both is
nevertheless to be found in the unity which follows.
Since in this way, and in this way only so far as we can see, two contrary categories can be
simultaneously true of a subject, and since we must hold these two to be simultaneously true, we arrive at
the conclusion that whenever we use the first category we shall be forced on to use the third, since by italone can the contradictions be removed, in which we should otherwise be involved. This third category,
however, when it in its turn is viewed as a single unity, similarly discloses that its predication involves
that of its contrary, and the Thesis and Antithesis thus opposed have again to be resolved in a Synthesis.
Nor can we rest anywhere in this alternate production and removal of contradictions until we reach the
end of the ladder of categories. It begins with the category of Pure Being, the simplest idea of the human
mind. It ends with the category which Hegel declares to be the highest the Idea which recognises itself
in all things.
2. It must be remarked that the type of transition, which we have just sketched, is one which is modified
as the dialectic advances. It is only natural, in a system in which matter and form are so closely
connected, that the gradual changes of the matter, which forms the content of the system, should react onthe nature of the movement by which the changes take place. Even when we deal with physical action and
reaction we find this true. All tools are affected, each time they are used, so as to change, more or less,
their manner of working in the future. It is not surprising, therefore, that so delicate a tool as that which is
used by thought should not remain unchanged among changing materials.
"The abstract form of the continuation or advance says Hegel is, in Being, an other (or antithesis) and
transition into another; in the Essence, showing or reflection in its opposite; in the Notion, the distinction
of the individual from the universality, which continues itself as such into, and is as an identity with, what
is distinguished from it. This indicates a gradual increase in the
directness of the advance, and a diminished importance of the movement from contrary to contrary. But
this point, which Hegel leaves undeveloped, will require further consideration.
3. The ground of the necessity which the dialectic process claims cannot, it is evident, lie merely in the
category from which we start. For in that case the conclusion of the process could, if it were valid, have
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no greater content than was contained in the starting point. All that can be done with a single premise is to
analyse it, and the mere analysis of an idea could never lead us necessarily onwards to any other idea
incompatible with it, and therefore could never lead us to its contrary. But the dialectic claims to proceed
from the lower to the higher, and it claims to add to our knowledge, and not merely to expound it. At the
same time it asserts that no premise other than the validity of the lower category is requisite to enable us
to affirm the validity of the higher.
The solution of this difficulty, which has been the ground of many attacks on Hegel, lies in the fact that
the dialectic must be looked on as a process, not of construction but of reconstruction. If the lower
categories lead on to the higher, and these to the highest, the reason is that the lower categories have no
independent existence, but are only abstractions from the highest. It is this alone which is independent
and real. In it all one-sidedness has been destroyed by the successive reconciliation of opposites. It is thus
the completely concrete, and for Hegel the real is always the concrete. Moreover, according to Hegel, the
real is always the completely rational. ("The consummation of the infinite aim . . . consists merely in
removing the illusion which makes it seem as yet unaccomplished. ) Now no category except the highest can be completely rational, since every lower one involves
its contrary. The Absolute Idea is present to us in all reality, in all the phenomena of experience, and in
our own selves. Everywhere it is the soul of all reality. But although it is always present to us, it is notalways explicitly present. In the content of consciousness it is present implicitly. But we do not always
attempt to unravel that content, nor are our attempts always successful. Very often all that is explicitly
before our minds is some finite and incomplete category. When this is so, the dialectic process can begin,
and indeed must begin, if we are sufficiently acute and attentive,because the ideal which is latent in the
nature of all experience, and of the mind itself, forbids us to rest content with the inadequate category.
The incomplete reality before the mind is inevitably measured against the complete reality of the mind
itself, and it is in this process that it betrays its incompleteness, and demands its contrary to supplement
its one-sidedness. Before the mind there is a single conception, but the whole mind itself, which does not
appear, engages in the process, operates on the datum, and produces the result.
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5. It has been asserted that Hegel sometimes declares the contradictions to be the cause of the dialectic
movement, and sometimes to be the effect of that movement. This is maintained by Hartmann. No doubt the contradictions are considered as the immediate
cause of the movement. But the only evidence which Hartmann gives for supposing that they are also
held to be the effect, is a quotation from the second volume of the Logic. In this, speaking of that finite
activity of thought which he calls Vorstellung, Hegel says that it has the contradictions as part of its
content, but is not conscious of this, because it does not contain das Uebergehen, welches das
Wesentliche ist, und den Widerspruch enthlt. Now all that this implies
seems to be that the contradictions first become manifest in the movement, which is not at all identical
with the assertion that they are caused by it, and is quite compatible with the counter-assertion that it is
caused by them.
Moreover, Hartmann also gives the same account of the origin of the contradictions which I have
suggested above. He says Der (im Hegel'schen Geiste) tiefer liegende Grund der Erscheinung ist aber die
Flssigkeit des Begriffes selbst. Flssigkeit is certainly not equivalent to
movement, and may fairly be translated instability. There is then no inconsistency. It is quite possible that
the instability of the notion may be the cause of the contradictions, and that the contradictions again may
be the cause of the actual motion. Hartmann does not, apparently, see that there is any change in hisposition when he gives first instability and then motion as the cause of the contradictions, and it is this
confusion on his own part which causes him to accuse Hegel of inconsistency.
He endeavours to account for Hegel's supposed error by saying that the contradictions were given as the
cause of the dialectic movement when Hegel desired to show the subjective action of the individual mind,
while the dialectic movement was given as the cause of the contradictions when he wished to represent
the process as objective. If, as I have endeavoured to show, there is no reason for supposing that Hegel
ever did hold the dialectic movement to be the cause of the contradictions, there will be no further
necessity for this theory. But it may be well to remark that it involves a false conception of the meaning in
which it is possible to apply the term objective to the dialectic at all.
6. There is a sense of the word objective in which it may be correctly said that the dependence of the
contradictions on the instability of the notion is more objective than the dependence of the dialectic
movement on the contradictions. For the former is present in all thought, which is not the case with the
latter. A contradiction can be said to be present in thought, when it is implied in it, even though it is not
clearly seen. But it can only cause the dialectic movement, when it is clearly seen. Whenever a finite
category is used it is abstract, and consequently unstable, and, implicitly at least, involves its contrary,
though this may not be perceived, and, indeed, in ordinary thought is not perceived. On the other hand,
the actual dialectic movement does not take place whenever a category is used, for in that case finite
thought would not exist at all. It is only when the contradictions are perceived, when they are recognised
as incompatible, in their unreconciled form, with truth, and when the synthesis which can reconcile them
has been discovered, that the dialectic process is before us.
The contradiction has therefore more objectivity, in one sense of the word, because it is more inevitable
and less dependent on particular and contingent circumstances. But we are not entitled to draw the sort of
distinction between them which Hartmann makes, and to say that while the one is only an action of the
thinking subject, the other is based on the nature of things independently of the subject who thinks them.
Both relations are objective in the sense that they are universal, and have validity as a description of the
nature of reality. Neither is objective in the sense that it takes place otherwise than in thought. We shall
have to consider this point in detail later: at present we can only say that, though the
dialectic process is a valid description of reality, reality itself is not, in its truest nature, a process but a
stable and timeless state. Hegel says indeed that reason is to be found in actual existence, but it is reason
in its complete and concrete shape, under the highest and absolute form of the notion, and not travelling
up from category to category. Till the highest is reached, all the results are expressly termed abstract, anddo not, therefore, come up to the level of reality. Moreover they contain unsynthesised contradictions, and
that which is contradictory, though it may have a certain relative truth, can never exist independently, as
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would be the case if it existed in the world of fact. The dialectic movement is indeed a guide to that
world, since the highest category, under which alone reality can be construed, contains all the lower
categories as moments, but the gradual passage from one stage of the notion to another, during which the
highest yet reached is for the moment regarded as independent and substantial, is an inadequate
expression of the truth.
7. This is not incompatible with the admission that various isolated phenomena, considered as phenomena
and as isolated, are imperfect, for in considering them in this way we do not consider them as they really
are. Hegel speaks of the untruth of an external object as consisting in the disagreement between the
objective notion, and the object. From this it might be inferred that
even in the world of real objects there existed imperfections and contradictions. But, on looking more
closely, we see that the imperfection and contradiction are really, according to Hegel, due only to our
manner of contemplating the object. A particular thing may or may not correspond to the notion. But the
universe is not merely an aggregation of particular things, but a system in which they are connected, and a
thing which in itself is imperfect and irrational may be a part of a perfect and rational universe. Its
imperfection was artificial, caused by our regarding it, in an artificial and unreal abstraction, as if it could
exist apart from other things.
A diseased body, for example, is in an untrue state, if we merely regard it by itself, since it is obviously
failing to fulfill the ideal of a body. But if we look at it in connection with the intellectual and spiritual
life of its occupant, the bodily imperfection might in some cases be seen, without going further, to be a
part in a rational whole. And, taking the universe as a whole, Hegel declares God alone exhibits a real
agreement of the notion and the reality. All finite things involve an untruth. God, however, is held by
Hegel to be the reality which underlies all finite things. It is therefore only when looked at as finite that
they involve an untruth. Looked at sub specie Dei they are true. The untruth is therefore in our manner of
apprehending them only. It would indeed, as Hartmann remarks, be senseless tautology for Hegel to talk
of the objective truth of the world. But this Hegel does not do. It is in the nature of the world as a whole
that it must be objectively true. But isolated
fragments of the world, just because they are isolated, cannot fully agree with the notion, and may or maynot agree with a particular aspect of it. According as they do or do not do this Hegel calls them true or
false.
Hegel's theory that the world as a whole must be objectively true, so rational, and therefore, as he would
continue, perfect, comes no doubt in rather rude contact with some of the facts of life. The consideration
of this must for the present be deferred.
8. We have seen that the motive power of the dialectic lies in the relation of the abstract idea explicitly
before the mind to the concrete idea implicitly before it in all experience and all consciousness. This will
enable us to determine the relation in which the ideas of contradiction and negation stand to the dialectic.
It is sometimes supposed that the Hegelian logic rests on a defiance of the law of contradiction. That lawsays that whatever is A can never at the same time be not-A. But the dialectic asserts that, when A is any
category, except the Absolute Idea, whatever is A may be, and indeed must be, not-A also. Now if the law
of contradiction is rejected, argument becomes impossible. It is impossible to refute any proposition
without the help of this law. The refutation can only take place by the establishment of another
proposition incompatible with the first. But if we are to regard the simultaneous assertion of two
contradictories, not as a mark of error, but as an indication of truth, we shall find it impossible to disprove
any proposition at all. Nothing, however, can ever claim to be considered as true, which could never be
refuted, even if it were false. And indeed it is impossible, as Hegel himself has pointed out to us, even to
assert anything without involving the law of contradiction, for every positive assertion has meaning only
in so far as it is defined, and therefore negative. If the statement All men are mortal, for example, did not
exclude the statement Some men are immortal, it would be meaningless. And it only excludes it by virtue
of the law of contradiction. If then the dialectic rejected the law of contradiction, it would reduce itself to
an absurdity, by rendering all argument, and even all assertion, unmeaning.
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9. It follows also from this view of the paramount importance of the synthesis in the dialectic process that
the place of negation in that process is only secondary. The really fundamental aspect of the dialectic is
not the tendency of the finite category to negate itself but to complete itself. Since the various relatively
perfect and concrete categories are, according to Hegel, made up each of two moments or aspects which
stand to one another in the relation of contrary ideas, it follows that one characteristic of the process will
be the passage from an idea to its contrary. But this is not due, as has occasionally been supposed, to an
inherent tendency in all finite categories to affirm their own negation as such. It is due to their inherent
tendency to affirm their own complement. It is indeed, according to Hegel, no empirical and contingent
fact, but an absolute and necessary law, that their complement is in some degree their negation. But the
one category passes into the other, because the second completes the meaning of the first, not because it
denies it.
This, however, is one of the points at which the difficulty, always great, of distinguishing what Hegel did
say from that which he ought in consistency to have said becomes almost insuperable. It may safely be
asserted that the motive force of the dialectic was clearly held by him to rest in the implicit presence in us
of its goal. This is admitted by his opponents as well as his supporters. That he did to some extent
recognise the consequence of thisthe subordinate importance which it assigned to the idea of negation
seems also probable, especially when we consider the passage quoted above, in which the element of negation appears to enter into the dialectic process
with very different degrees of prominence in the three stages of which that process consists. On the other
hand, the absence of any detailed exposition of a principle so fundamental as that of the gradually
decreasing share taken by negation in the dialectic, and the failure to follow out all its consequences,
seem to indicate that he had either not clearly realised it, or had not perceived its full importance. But to
this point it will be necessary to return.
10. What relation, we must now enquire, exists between thought as engaged in the dialectic process, and
thought as engaged in the ordinary affairs of life? In these latter we continually employ the more abstract
categories, which, according to Hegel, are the more imperfect, as if they were satisfactory and ultimate
determinations of thought. So far as we do this we must contrive to arrest for the time the dialecticmovement. While a category is undergoing the changes and transformations in which that movement
consists, it is as unfit to be used as an instrument of thought, as an expanding rod would be for a yard
measure. We may observe, and even argue about, the growth of the idea, as we may observe the
expansion of a rod under heat, but the argument must be conducted with stable ideas, as the observation
must be made with measures of unaltering size. For if, for example, a notion, when employed as a middle
term, is capable of changing its meaning between the major and the minor premises, it renders the whole
syllogism invalid. And all reasoning depends on the assumption that a term can be trusted to retain the
same meaning on different occasions. Otherwise, any inference would be impossible, since all connection
between propositions would be destroyed.
There are two ways in which we may treat the categories. The first is, in the language of Hegel, the
function of the Reason to perform, namely, the dialectic process, and when that culminates in thehighest category, which alone is without contradiction, to construe the world by its means. As this
category has no contradictions in it, it is stable and can be used without any fear of its transforming itself
under our hands. The second function is that of the Understanding, whose characteristic it is to treat
abstractions as if they were independent realities. They are thus forced into an artificial stability and
permanence, and can be used for the work of ordinary thought. Of course the attempt to use an imperfect
and unbalanced category as if it were perfect and self-subsistent leads to errors and contradictions it is
just these errors and contradictions which are the proof that the category is imperfect. But for many
purposes the limit of error is so small, that the work of the Understanding possesses practical use and
validity. If we take an arc three feet long of the circumference of a circle a mile in diameter, it will be
curved, and will show itself to be so, if examined with sufficient accuracy. But in practice it would often
produce no inconvenience to treat it as a straight line. So, if an attempt is made to explain experienceexclusively by the category, for example, of causality, it will be found, if the matter is considered with
enough care, that any explanation, in which no higher category is employed, involves a contradiction.
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Nevertheless, for many of the everyday occurrences on which we
exercise our thoughts, an explanation by the Understanding, by means of the category of causality only,
will be found to rationalise the event sufficiently for the needs of the moment.
11. To this explanation an objection has been raised by Hartmann. He
emphatically denies our power to arrest the progress of the Notion in this manner. It might, he admits,
be possible to do so, if the Notion were changed by us, but it is represented as changing itself. The human
thinker is thus only the fifth wheel to the cart, and quite unable to arrest a process which is entirely
independent of him.
Now in one sense of the words it is perfectly true, that, if the Notion changes at all, the change is caused
by its own nature, and not by us. If the arguments of the dialectic are true, they must appeal with
irresistible force to every one who looks into the question with sufficient ability and attention, and thus
the process may be said to be due to the Notion, and not to the thinker. But this is no more than may be
said of every argument. If it is valid, it is not in the power of any man who has examined it, to deny its
validity. But when there is no logical alternative there may be a psychological one. No intelligent man,
who carefully examines the proofs, can doubt that the earth goes round the sun. But any person who will
not examine them, or cannot understand them, may remain convinced all his life that the sun goes roundthe earth. And any one, however clearly he understands the truth, can, by diverting his attention from
comparatively remote astronomical arguments, and fixing it on the familiar and daily appearances, speak
of and picture the movement as that of the sun, as most men, I suppose, generally do.
So with the dialectic. The arguments are, if Hegel is right, such as to leave the man who examines them
no option. But for those who have no time, inclination, or ability to examine them, the categories will
continue to be quite separate and independent, while the contradictions which this view will produce in
experience will either be treated as ultimate, or, more probably, will not be noticed at all. And even for
the student of philosophy, the arguments remain so comparatively abstruse and unfamiliar that he finds no
difficulty, when practical life requires it, in assuming for a time the point of view of the Understanding,
and regarding each category as unchanging and self-supporting. This he does merely by diverting his
attention from the arguments by which their instability is proved.
Although therefore the change in the Notion is due to its nature, it does not follow that it cannot be
stopped by peculiarities in the nature of the thinker, or by his arbitrary choice. The positive element in the
change lies wholly in the Notion, but that it should take place at all in any particular case requires certain
conditions in the individual mind in question, and by changing these conditions we can at will arrest the
process of the categories, and use any one of them as fixed and unchanging.
Any other view of the dialectic process would require us to suppose that the movement of the categories
became obvious to us, not as the result of much hard thinking, but spontaneously and involuntarily. It can
scarcely be asserted that Hegel held such a theory, which would lead to the conclusion that everyone who
ever used the category of Being that is everyone who ever thought at all, whether he reflected onthought or not,had gone through all the stages of the Hegelian logic, and arrived at all its conclusions.
12. Another difficulty which Hartmann brings forward in this connection arises from a misapprehension
of Hegel's meaning. He affirms that, so far from stopping the dialectic process,
we could not even perceive it when it took place. For we can only become aware of the change by
comparing stage A with stage B, and how is it possible that we should do this, if A turns into B, beyond
our control, whenever it appears?
In the first place, we may answer, it is possible, as we have seen, to arrest the dialectic movement, in any
given case, at will, so that the development of the categories is not beyond our control. In the second
place the thesis is not held by Hegel to turn into the antithesis in the simple and complete way which this
objection supposes. The one category leads up to and postulates the other but does not become completelythe same as its successor. The thesis and antithesis are said no doubt to be the same, but the same with a
difference. If we predicate A, we are forced to predicate B, but there remains nevertheless a distinction
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between A and B. It is just the coexistence of this distinction with the necessary implication of the one
category in the other, which renders the synthesis necessary as a reconciliation. If the thesis and antithesis
were not different, the simultaneous predication of both of them would involve no difficulty.
13. Such is the general nature of the dialectic as conceived by Hegel. How does he attempt to prove its
truth and necessity? The proof must be based on something already understood and granted by those to
whom it is addressed. And since the proof should be one which must be accepted by all men, we must
base it on that which all men allow to be justifiable the ordinary procedure, that is, of thought in
common sense and science, which Hegel calls the Understanding as opposed to the Reason. We must
show that if we grant, as we cannot help granting, the validity of the ordinary exercise of our thought, we
must also grant the validity of the dialectic.
This necessity Hegel recognises. He says, it is true, that, since only the Reason possesses the complete
truth, up to which the merely partial truth of the Understanding leads, the real explanation must be of the
Understanding by the Reason. But this is not inconsistent with a
recognition of the necessity of justifying the Reason to the Understanding. The course of real explanation
must always run from ground to consequent, and, according to Hegel, from concrete to abstract. On the
other hand, the order of proof must run from whatever is known to whatever is unknown. When, as wehave seen is the case with the dialectic, we start from explicit knowledge of the abstract only, and proceed
to knowledge of the concrete, which alone gives reality to that abstract, the order of explanation and the
order of proof must clearly be exactly opposite to one another.
The justification of the Reason at the bar of the Understanding, depends upon two facts. The one is the
search for the Absolute which is involved in the Understanding, the other is the existence in the
Understanding of contradictions which render it impossible that it should succeed in the search. The
Understanding demands an answer to every question it can ask. But every question which it succeeds in
answering suggests fresh questions. Any explanation requires some reference to surrounding phenomena,
and these in their turn must be explained by reference to others, and nothing can therefore be fully
explained unless everything else which is in direct or indirect connection with it, unless, that is, the whole
universe, be fully explained also. And the explanation of a phenomenon requires, besides this, the
knowledge of its causes and effects, while these again require a knowledge of their causes and effects, so
that not only the whole present universe, but the of the past and future must be known before any single
fact can be really understood. Again, since the knowledge of a phenomenon involves the knowledge of its
parts, and all phenomena, occurring as they do in space and time, are infinitely divisible, our knowledge
must not only be infinitely extended over space and time, but also infinitely minute. The connection of the
phenomenal universe by the law of reciprocity has a double effect on knowledge. It is true, as Tennyson
tells us, that we could not know a single flower completely without also knowing God and man. But it is
also true that, till we know everything about God and man, we cannot answer satisfactorily a single
question about the flower. In asking any question whatever, the Understanding implicitly asks for a
complete account of the whole Universe, throughout all space and all time. It demands a solution which
shall really solve the question without raising fresh ones a complete and symmetrical system ofknowledge.
This ideal it cannot, as Hegel maintains, reach by its own exertions, because it is the nature of the
Understanding to treat the various finite categories as self-subsistent unities, and this attempt leads it into
the various contradictions pointed out throughout the dialectic, owing to the inevitable connection of
every finite category with its contrary. Since, then, it postulates in all its actions an ideal which cannot be
reached by itself, it is obliged, unless it would deny its own validity, to admit the validity of the Reason,
since by the Reason alone can the contradictions be removed, and the ideal be realised. And, when it has
done this, it loses the false independence which made it suppose itself to be something different from the
Reason.
14. One of the most difficult and important points in determining the nature of the Hegelian logic is to
find its exact relation to experience. Whatever theory we may adopt has to fall within certain limits. On
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the one hand it is asserted by Hegel's critics, and generally admitted by his followers, that, rightly or
wrongly, there is some indispensable reference to experience in the dialectic so that, without the aid of
experience it would be impossible for the cogency of the dialectic process to display itself. On the other
hand it is impossible to deny that, in some sense, Hegel believed that the dialectic process takes place in
pure thought, that, however incomplete the Logic might be without the Philosophy of Nature, and the
Philosophy of Spirit, however much the existence of Nature and Spirit might be involved in the existence
of pure thought, yet nevertheless within the sphere of logic we had arrived at pure thought, unconditioned
in respect of its development as thought.
And both these characteristics of the dialectic are, independently of Hegel's assertion, clearly necessary
for the validity of any possible dialectic. The consideration of pure thought, without any reference to
experience, would be absolutely sterile, or rather impossible. For we are as unable to employ empty
pure thought (to borrow Kant's phrase) as to employ blind intuition. Thought is a process of mediation
and relation, and implies something immediate to be related, which cannot be found in thought. Even if a
stage of thought could be conceived as existing, in which it was self- subsistent, and in which it had no
reference to any data and it is impossible to imagine such a state, or to give any reason for supposing
thought thus to change its essential nature at any rate this is not the ordinary thought of common life.
And as the dialectic process professes to start from a basis common to everyone, so as to enable it toclaim universal validity for its conclusions, it is certain that it will be necessary for thought, in the
dialectic process, to have some relation to data given immediately, and independent of that thought itself.
Even if the dialectic should finally transcend this condition it would have at starting to take thought as we
use it in every-day lifeas merely mediating, and not self-subsistent. And I shall try to show later on that
it never does transcend, or try to transcend that limitation.
On the other hand it is no less true that any argument would be incapable of leading us to general
conclusions relating to pure thought, which was based on the nature of any particular piece of experience
in its particularity, and that, whatever reference to experience Hegel may or may not have admitted into
his system, his language is conclusive against the possibility that he has admitted any empirical or
contingent basis to the dialectic.
15. The two conditions can, however, be reconciled. There is a sense in which conclusions relating to
pure thought may properly be based on an observation of experience, and in this sense, as I believe, we
must take the Logic in order to arrive at Hegel's true meaning. According to this view, what is observed is
the spontaneous and unconditioned movement of the pure notion, which does not in any way depend on
the matter of intuition for its validity, which, on the contrary, is derived from the character of the pure
reason itself. But the process, although independent of the matter of intuition, can only be perceived when
the pure notion is taken in conjunction with matter of intuition that is to say when it is taken in
experiencebecause it is impossible for us to grasp thought in absolute purity, or except as applied to an
immediate datum. Since we cannot observe pure thought at all, except in experience, it is clear that it is
only in experience that we can observe the change from the less to the more adequate form which thought
undergoes in the dialectic process. But this change of form is due to the nature of thought alone, and notto the other element in experience the matter of intuition.
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considered by itself, being false and misleading. This, as we shall see, is the position which Hegel does
take up. Even so, it will still remain true that, in experience, the dialectic process was due exclusively to
that element of experience which we call pure thought, the other elementthat of intuitionbeing indeed
an indispensable condition of the dialectic movement, but one which remains passive throughout, and one
by which the movement is not determined. It is only necessary to the movement of the idea because it is
necessary to its existence. It is not itself a principle of change, which may as fairly be said to be
independent, as the changes in the pictures of a magic lantern may be ascribed exclusively to the camera,
and not at all to the canvas on which they are reflected, although without the canvas, the pictures
themselves, and therefore the transition from one to another of them would be impossible.
16. If this is the relation of the dialectic process to the medium in which it works, what postulate does it
require to start from? We must distinguish its postulate from its basis. Its basis is the reality which it
requires to have presented to itself, in order that it may develop itself. Its postulate is the proposition
which it requires to have admitted, in order that from this premise it may demonstrate its own logical
validity as a consequence. The basis of the dialectic is to be found in the nature of pure thought itself,
since the reason of the process being what it is, is due, as we have seen, to the nature of the highest and
most concrete form of the notion, implicit in all experience. Since pure thought, as we have seen, even if
it could exist at all in any other manner, could only become evident to us in experience, the basis whichthe dialectic method will require to work on, may be called the nature of experience in general.
It is only the general nature of experience those characteristics which are common to all of it which
forms the basis of the process. For it is not the only object of the dialectic to prove that the lower and
subordinate categories are unable to explain all parts of experience without resorting to the higher
categories, and finally to the Absolute Idea. It undertakes also to show that the lower categories are
inadequate, when considered with sufficient intelligence and persistence, to explain any part of the world.
What is required, therefore, is not so much the collection of a large mass of experience to work on, but the
close and careful scrutiny of some part, however small. The whole chain of categories is implied in any
and every phenomenon. Particular fragments of experience may no doubt place the inadequacy of some
finite category in a specially clear light, or may render the transition to the next stage of the ideaparticularly obvious and easy, but it is only greater convenience which is thus gained; with sufficient
power any part, however unpromising, would yield the same result.
17. The basis of the dialectic process, then, is the nature of experience, in so far as the nature of pure
thought is contained in it. If the other element in experience has really a primary and essential nature of
its own, it will not concern us here, for, as it takes no part in the development of the idea, its existence,
and not its particular qualities, is the only thing with which we are at present concerned. The nature of
experience however, though it is the basis of the dialectic, is not its logical postulate. For it is not assumed
but ascertained by the dialectic, whose whole object is the gradual discovery and demonstration of the
Absolute Idea, which is the fundamental principle which makes the nature of experience. The general
laws governing experience are the causa essendi of the logic, but not its causa cognoscendi.
The only logical postulate which the dialectic requires is the admission that experience really exists. The
dialectic is derived from the nature of experience, and therefore if it is to have any validity of real
existence, if it is to have, that is to say, any importance at all, we must be assured of the existence of some
experiencein other words, that something is.
The object of the dialectic is to discover the forms and laws of all possible thought. For this purpose it
starts from the idea of Being, in which all others are shown to be involved. The application of the results
of the dialectic to experience thus depends on the application to experience of the idea of Being, and the
logical postulate of the dialectic is no more than that something is, and that the category of Being is
therefore valid.
It will be noticed that the basis and the postulate of the dialectic correspond to the two aspects of the idea
which we mentioned above as the fundamental cause of the process. The basis the nature of pure
thought is the complete and concrete idea which is present in our minds, though only implicitly, and
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which renders it impossible that we should stop short of it by permanently acquiescing in any finite
category. The postulatethe abstract idea in its highest state of abstraction, which is admitted to be valid
is that which is explicitly before the mind, and from which the start is made.
18. We are justified in assuming this postulate because it is involved in every action and every thought,
and its denial is therefore suicidal. All that is required is the assertion that there is such a thing as reality
that something is. Now the very denial of this involves the reality of the denial, and so contradicts itself
and affirms our postulate. And the denial also implies the reality of the person who makes the denial. The
same dilemma meets us if we try to take refuge from dogmatic denial in mere doubt. If we really doubt,
then the doubt is real, and there is something of whose reality we do not doubt; if on the other hand we do
not really doubt the proposition that there is something real, we admit its truth. And doubt, as well as
denial, places beyond doubt the existence of the doubter. This is, of course, the Cartesian argument,
which is never stated by Hegel precisely in this form, but on which the justification of his use of the
category of Being, as valid of reality, appears to depend.
19. The dialectical process thus gains its validity and importance by means of a transcendental argument.
The higher categories are connected with the lower in such a manner that the latter inevitably lead on to
the former as the only means by which they can be rescued from the contradictions involved in theirabstractness. If the lower categories be admitted, and, ultimately, if the lowest of all, the category of
Being, be admitted, the rest follows. But we cannot by the most extreme scepticism deny that something
is, and we are therefore enabled to conclude that the dialectic process does apply to something. And as
whatever the category of Being did not apply to would not exist, we are also able to conclude that there is
nothing to which the dialectic process does not apply.
It will be seen that this argument is strictly of a transcendental nature. A proposition denied by the
adversaryin this case the validity of the higher categoriesis shown to be involved in the truth of some
other proposition, which he is not prepared to attackin this case the validity of the category of Being.
But the cogency of ordinary transcendental arguments is limited, and they apply only to people who are
prepared to yield the proposition which forms the foundation of the argument, so that they could be
outflanked by a deeper scepticism. Now this is not the case with the dialectic. For the proposition on
which it is based is so fundamental, that it could be doubted only at the expense of self-contradiction, and
the necessity of considering that proposition true is therefore universal, and not only valid in a specially
limited argument, or against a special opponent. It is doubtful indeed whether a condition so essential as
this is correctly termed a postulate, which seems to denote more properly a proposition which it would be
at least possible for an adversary to challenge. At any rate the very peculiar nature of the assumption
should be carefully remembered, as it affords a clue for interpreting various expressions of Hegel's, which
might otherwise cause serious difficulties.
20. Having thus endeavoured to explain the nature of the dialectic, we must ask ourselves at what results
we are entitled to arrive by means of that process. These results will be, to begin with, epistemological.
For the conditions of the dialectic are, first, the concrete notion, which we are able to examine because itis implicit in all our consciousness, and, second, the category of Being, which we are entitled to postulate,
because it is impossible to avoid employing it in judging experience. Our conclusions will therefore relate
primarily to the general laws of experience, and will so far be, like those of Kant's Aesthetic and Analytic,
concerned with the general conditions of human knowledge. And the result arrived at will be that no
category will satisfactorily explain the universe except the Absolute Idea. Any attempt to employ for that
purpose a lower category must either accept a gradual transformation of the idea employed until the
Absolute Idea is reached, or acquiesce in unreconciled contradictions which involves the rejection of a
fundamental law of reason.
21. This position has two results. In the first place it disproves the efforts which are made from time to
time to explain the whole universe by means of the lower categories only. Such an attempt lay at the
bottom of Hume's scepticism, when he endeavoured to treat the notion of causality as derived from that of
sequence, and to consider all that was added as false and illusive. For absolute scepticism is impossible,
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and his treatment of the higher category as an unwarranted inference from the lower involves the
assertion of the validity of the latter. Such an attempt, again, has been made by Mr Spencer, as well as by
the large number of writers who adopt the provisional assumptions of physical science as an ultimate
position. They endeavour to explain all phenomena in terms of matter and motion, and to treat all special
laws by which they may be governed as merely particular cases of fundamental principles taken from
physical science.
But if we agree with Hegel in thinking that the category of Being is inadequate to explain the world which
we know without the successive introduction of the categories, among others, of Cause, Life, and Self-
Consciousness, and that each category inevitably requires its successor, all such attempts must inevitably
fail. Any attempt, for example, to reduce causation to an unjustifiable inference from succession, to
explain life merely in terms of matter and motion, or knowledge merely in terms of life, would involve a
fatal confusion. For it would be an attempt at explanation by that which is, in itself, incomplete, unreal,
and contradictory, and which can only be made rational by being viewed as an aspect of those very higher
categories, which were asserted to have been explained away by its means.
22. Even if this were all, the result of the dialectic would be of great importance. It would have refuted all
attempts to establish a complete and consistent materialism, and would have demonstrated the claims ofthe categories of spirit to a place in construing part at least of the universe. But it has done more than this.
For it does not content itself with showing that the lower categories lead necessarily to the higher, when
the question relates to those portions of experience in which the higher categories are naturally applied by
the uncritical consciousness. It also demonstrates that the lower categories, in themselves, and to
whatever matter of intuition they may be applied, involve the higher categories also. Not only is Being
inadequate to explain, without the aid of Becoming, those phenomena which we all recognise in ordinary
life as phenomena of change, but it is also unable to explain those others which are commonly considered
as merely cases of unchanging existence. Not only is the idea of Substance inadequate to deal with
ordinary cases of scientific causation, but without the idea of Cause it becomes involved in contradictions,
even when keeping to the province which the uncritical consciousness assigns to it. Not only is it
impossible to explain the phenomena of vegetable and animal life by the idea of mechanism, but that ideais inadequate even to explain the phenomena of physics. Not only can consciousness not be expressed
merely in terms of life, but life is an inadequate category even for biological phenomena. With such a
system we are able to admit, without any danger either to its consistency or to its practical corollaries, all
that science can possibly claim as to the interrelation of all the phenomena of the universe, and as to the
constant determination of mind by purely physical causes. For not only have we justified the categories of
spirit, but we have subjected the whole world of experience to their rule. We are entitled to assert, not
only that spirit cannot be reduced to matter, but also that matter must be reduced to spirit. It is of no
philosophical importance, therefore, though all things should, from the scientific standpoint, be
determined by material causes. For all material determination is now known to be only spiritual
determination in disguise.
23. The conclusion thus reached is one which deals with pure thought, since the argument has restedthroughout on the nature of pure thought, and on that only, and the conclusion itself is a statement as to
the only form of pure thought which we can use with complete correctness. But we have not found
anything which would enable us to discard sensation from its position as an element of experience as
necessary and fundamental as pure thought itself, and if Hegel did draw such a consequence from it, we
must hold that he has taken an unjustifiable step forwards. All the thought which we know is in its
essential nature mediate, and requires something immediate to act on, if it is to act at all. And this
immediate element can be found so far as our present knowledge is concernedonly in sensation, the
necessary background and accompaniment of the dialectic process, which is equally essential at its end as
at its beginning. For an attempt to eliminate it would require that Hegel should, in the first place, explain
how we could ever conceive unmediated or self-mediated thought, and that he should, in the second
place, show that the existence of this self-subsistent thought was implied in the existence of the mediatingand independent thought of every-day life. For since it is only the validity of our every-day thought which
we find it impossible to deny, it is only that thought which we can take as the basis of the dialectic
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process. Even if, in the goal of the dialectic, thought became self-subsistent in any intelligible sense, it
would be necessary to show that this self-subsistence issued naturally from the finite categories, in which
thought is unquestionably recognised as mediate only.
I shall endeavour to prove later on that Hegel made no attempt to take up
this position. The conclusion of the Logic is simply the assertion that the one category by which
experience can be judged with complete correctness is the Absolute Idea. It makes no attempt to
transcend the law which we find in all experience by which the categories cannot be used of reality, nor
indeed apprehended at all, without the presence of immediate data to serve as materials for them.
24. To sum up, the general outline of the Hegelian Logic, from an epistemological point of view, does not
differ greatly, I believe, from that of Kant. Both philosophers justify the application of certain categories
to the matter of experience, by proving that the validity of those categories is implied in the validity of
other ideas which the sceptical opponent cannot or does not challenge. The systems differ largely in many
points, particularly in the extent to which they push their principles. And Hegel has secured a firmer
foundation for his theory than Kant did, by pushing back his deduction till it rests on a category the
category of Being,the validity of which with regard to experience not only never had been denied, but
could not be denied without contradiction. It is true also that Kant's work was clearly analytic, whileHegel's had also a synthetic side, and may even be said to have brought that side into undue, or at any rate
misleading, prominence. But the general principle of the two systems was the same, and the critic who
finds no fundamental fallacy in Kant's criticism of knowledge, should have no difficulty in admitting that
the Hegelian Logic, if it keeps itself free from errors of detail, forms a valid theory of epistemology.
25. But the Logic claims to be more than this, and we must now proceed to examine what has been
generally held to be at once the most characteristic and the weakest part of Hegel's philosophy. How far
does he apply the results of his analysis of knowledge to actual reality, and how far is he justified in doing
so?
It is beyond doubt that Hegel regarded his Logic as possessing, in some manner, ontological significance.
But this may mean one of two very different things. It may mean only that the system rejects the Kantianthing-in-itself, and denies the existence of any reality except that which enters into experience, so that the
results of a criticism of knowledge are valid of reality also. But it may mean that it endeavours to
dispense with or transcend all data except the nature of thought itself, and to deduce from that nature the
whole existing universe. The difference between these two positions is considerable. The first maintains
that nothing is real but the reasonable, the second that reality is nothing but rationality. The first maintains
that we can explain the world of sense, the second that we can explain it away. The first merely confirms
and carries further the process of rationalisation, of which all science and all finite knowledge consist; the
second differs entirely from science and finite knowledge, substituting a self- sufficient and absolute
thought for thought which is relative and complementary to the data of sense. It is, I maintain, in the first
of these senses, and the first only, that Hegel claims ontological validity for the results of the Logic, and
that he should do as much as this is inevitable. For to distinguish between conclusions epistemologicallyvalid and those which extend to ontology implies a belief in the existence of something which does not
enter into the field of actual or possible knowledge. Such a belief is totally unwarranted. The thing-in-
itself as conceived by Kant, behind and apart from the phenomena which alone enter into experience, is a
contradiction. We cannot, we are told, know what it is, but only that it is. But this is itself an important
piece of knowledge relating to the thing. It involves a judgment, and a judgment involves categories, and
we are thus forced to surrender the idea that we can be aware of the existence of anything which is not
subject to the laws governing experience. Moreover, the only reason which can be given for our belief in
things-in-themselves is that they are the ground or substratum of our sensuous intuitions. But this is a
relation, and a relation involves a category. Indeed every statement which can be made about the thing-in-
itself contradicts its alleged isolation.
26. It cannot be denied, however, that Hegel does more than is involved in the rejection of a thing-in-itself
outside the laws of experience. Not only are his epistemological conclusions declared to have also
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ontological validity, but he certainly goes further and holds that, from the consideration of the existence
of pure thought, we are able to deduce the existence of the worlds of Nature and Spirit. Is this equivalent
to an admission that the worlds of Nature and Spirit can be reduced to, or explained away by, pure
thought?
We shall see that this is not the case when we reflect that the dialectic process is no less analytic of a
given material than it is synthetic from a given premise, and owes its impulse as much to the perfect and
concrete idea which is implicit in experience, as to the imperfect and abstract idea which is explicitly
before the student. For if the idea is, when met with in reality, always perfect and concrete, it is no less
true that it is, when met with in reality, invariably, and of necessity, found in connection with sensuous
intuition, without which even the relatively concrete idea which ends the Logic is itself an illegitimate
abstraction. This being the case it follows that, as each stage of the Logic insists on going forward to the
next stage, so the completed logical idea insists on going forward and asserting the coexistence with itself
of sensuous perception. It does not postulate any particular sensuous perception, for the idea is equally
implicit in all experience, and one fragment is as good as another in which to perceive it. We are thus
unable to deduce any of the particulars of the world of sense from the Logic. But we are able to deduce
that there must be such a world, for without it the idea would be still an abstraction and therefore still
contradictory. We are able to predicate of that world whatever is necessary to make it the complement ofthe world of pure thought. It must be immediate, that thought may have something to mediate, individual
and isolated piece from piece that thought may have something to relate. It must be, in short, the abstract
individual, which, together with the abstract universal of thought, forms the concrete reality, alike
individual and universal, which alone is consistent and self-sustained.
27. If this is so, it follows that there is nothing mysterious or intricate about the deduction of the world of
Nature from the Logic, and of the world of Spirit from the world of Nature. It is simply the final step in
the self- recovery of the spirit from the illegitimate abstractions of the understandingthe recovery which
we have seen to be the source of all movement in the dialectic. Once granted a single category of the
Logic, and all the others follow, since in the world of reality each lower category only exists as a moment
of the Absolute Idea, and can therefore never by itself satisfy the demands of the mind. And, in likemanner, the world of pure thought only exists as an abstraction from concrete reality, so that, granted pure
thought, we are compelled by the necessity of the dialectic to grant the existence of some sensuous
intuition also. It is perhaps conceivable that, in some future state of knowledge, the completion of the
dialectic process might be seen to involve, not only the mere existence of Nature and Spirit, but their
existence with particular characteristics, and that this might be carried so far that it amounted to a
complete determination, in one way or another, of every question which could be asked concerning them.
If this should be the case, we should be able to deduce priori from the character of pure thought the
whole contents of science and history. Even then, however, we should not have taken up the position that
the immediate element in Nature and Spirit could be reduced to pure thought. For we should not be
endeavouring to deduce the immediate merely from the mediate, but from the mediate compared with the
concrete reality of which they are both moments. The true force of the proof would lie in the existence of
this synthesis. At present, however, the world of sense appears to us to contain a large number of
particulars which are quite indifferent to pure thought, so that it might be as well embodied in one
arrangement of them as in another. This may possibly be an inevitable law of knowledge. It certainly
expresses the state of our knowledge at present. It follows that the Philosophy of Nature and Spirit will
consist only in observing the progress of the pure idea as it appears in the midst of phenomena to a large
extent contingent to it, and cannot hope to account for all the particulars of experience. But this is all that
Hegel attempts to do. He endeavours to find the idea in everything, but not to reduce everything to a
manifestation of the idea. Thus he remarks in the Philosophy of Spirit, This development of reality or
objectivity brings forward a row of forms which must certainly be given empirically, but from an
empirical point of view should not be placed side by side and outside each other, but must be known as
the expression which corresponds to a necessary series of definite notions, and only in so far as they
express such a series of notions have interest for philosophic thought.
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28. If this explanation be correct, it will follow that Hegel never endeavoured to claim ontological validity
for his Logic in the second sense mentioned above by attempting, that is, to deduce all the contents of
experience from the nature of pure thought only. The deduction which does take place is not dependent
merely on the premise from which it starts, which is certainly to be found in the nature of pure thought,
but also on the whole to which it is working up, and which is implicit in our thought. If we can proceed in
this way from Logic to Nature and Spirit, it proves that Logic without the additional elements which
occur in Nature and Spirit is a mere abstraction. And an abstraction cannot possibly be the cause of the
reality from which it is an abstraction. There can be no place here, therefore, for the attempt to construct
the world out of abstract thought, of which Hegel's philosophy is sometimes supposed to have consisted.
The importance of the ontological significance of the dialectic, even in this limited extent, is, however,
very great. We are now enabled to assert, not only that, within our experience, actual or possible,
everything can be explained by the Absolute Idea, but also that all reality, in any sense in which we can
attach any intelligible meaning to the word, can also be explained by that idea. I cannot have the least
reason to believe in, or even to imagine possible, anything which does not in the long run turn out to
contain and be constituted by the highest category. And since that category, as was pointed out above,
expresses the deepest nature of the human mind, we are entitled to believe that the universe as a whole is
in fundamental agreement with our own nature, and that whatever can rightly be called rational may besafely declared to be also real.
29. From this account of the Hegelian system it will appear that its main result is the completion of the
work which had been carried on by German philosophy since the publication of the Critique of Pure
Reason the establishment, by means of the transcendental method, of the rationality of the Universe.
There was much left for Hegel to do. For the Critique of Pure Reason was a dualism, and had all the
qualities of a dualism. Man's aspirations after complete rationality and complete justice in life were
checked by the consideration of the phenomenal side of his own nature, which delivered him over to the
mercy of a world in one of whose elements the irrational manifold he saw only what was alien to
himself. And the defect of the Critique of Pure Reason in this respect was not completely remedied by the
Critique of Practical Reason. The reconciliation was only external: the alien element was not to beabsorbed or transcended but conquered. It was declared the weaker, but it kept its existence. And the
whole of this argument had a slighter basis than the earlier one, since it rested, not on the validity of
knowledge, but on the validity of the moral sensethe denial of which is not as clearly a contradiction of
itself. Moreover, it is not by any means universally admitted that the obligation to seek the good is
dependent on the possibility of realising it in full. And if it is not so dependent then the validity of the
moral sense does not necessarily imply the validity of the Ideas of Reason. Even in the Critique of
Judgment the reconciliation of the two sides was still external and incomplete.
Nor had spirit a much stronger position with Kant's immediate successors. Fichte, indeed, reduced the
Non-Ego to a shadow, but just for that reason, as Dr Caird remarks, rendered it impossible to completely
destroy it. And the Absolute of Schelling, standing as it did midway between matter and spirit, could be
but slight comfort to spirit, whose most characteristic features and most important interests had littlechance of preservation in a merely neutral basis.
Hegel on the other hand asserted the absolute supremacy of reason. For him it is the key to the
interpretation of the whole universe; it finds nothing alien to itself wherever it goes. And the reason for
which he thus claimed unrestricted power was demonstrated to contain every category up to the Absolute
Idea. It is this demonstration quite as much as the rejection of the possibility that anything in the
universe should be alien to reason which gives his philosophy its practical interest. For from the
practical point of view it is of little consequence that the world should be proved to be the embodiment of
reason, if we are to see in reason nothing higher than reciprocity, and are compelled to regard the higher
categories as mere subjective delusions. Such a maimed reason as this is one in which we can have
scarcely more pleasure or acquiescence than in chaos. If the rational can be identified with the good, itcan only be in respect of the later categories, such as End, Life, and Cognition.
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Chapter II: Different Interpretations of the Dialectic
30. IN the last chapter I have explained the view of Hegels philosophy which seems to me the most
probable. It is now necessary to examine some objections which have been raised to the possibility of
interpreting Hegel in this manner. With regard to three points in particular various commentators have
taken a different view of Hegels meaning. It has been held that the dialectic proce ss has no reference
whatever to experience, but takes place in pure thought considered apart from anything else. It has been
held that, whether this be so or not, yet at the end of the dialectic we reach, in the Absolute Idea, a form of
thought which exists in and by itself, and does not merely mediate data immediately given to the mind by
some other source. And, lastly, it has been held that the deduction of Nature and Spirit from Logic is to be
taken as an attempt to degrade them into mere forms of the latter, and to declare that all things are
reducible to thought alone.
31. The first of these points has been discussed by Trendelenburg in his Logische Untersuchungen.
According to him, Hegel attempted what was impossible, and achieved what was useless. He attempted,
by observation of the pure notion in its most abstract stage, and apart from everything but itself, to evoke
all the other stages of the pure notion, and so reach a result of general validity priori. But since we can
extract from an idea, taken by itself, nothing more than is already in it, and since an idea, independent ofthe data which it connects and mediates, is unthinkable, any such dialectical evolution as Hegel desired
was impossible. In point of fact, all appearance of advance from one category to another is due, according
to Trendelenburg, to surreptitious appeals to experience. In this way the sterility of pure thought was
conquered, but with it the cogency of this dialectic process also disappeared, and it became merely
empirical and contingent, without a claim to be called philosophy.
On the question as to the actual results of the dialectic we shall consider Trendelenburgs views further
on. As to Hegels intention, he says Although the Wissenschaftslehre of Fichte extracted the Non-Ego
from the Ego, yet he does not go on to real notions. The dialectic has appropriated his methods; it takes
the same course in position, opposition, and reconciliation. It does not make so much difference that it
begins with the notion of Being, for it is the empty image of Being. If it nevertheless comes to the notions
of reality and to concrete forms, we do not perceive whence it gets to them. For pure thought will not
accept them, and then permeate them, but endeavours to make them. Thought, expressed in this way, is
born blind and has no eyes towards the outside.
32. In answer to this we may quote Mr F. H. Bradley. An idea prevails that the Dialectic Method is a sort
of experiment with conceptions in vacuo. We are supposed to have nothing but one single isolated
abstract idea, and this solitary monad then proceeds to multiply by gemmation from or by fission of its
private substance, or by fetching matter from the impalpable void. But this is a mere caricature, and it
comes from confusion between that which the mind has got before it and that which it has within itself.
Before the mind there is a single conception, but the mind itself, which does not appear, engages in the
process, operates on the datum, and produces the result. The opposition between the real, in thefragmentary character in which the mind possesses it, and the true reality felt within the mind, is the
moving cause of that unrest which sets up the dialectical process.
The fact seems to be that Trendelenburgs interpretation of Hegels attempt to construct a dialectic of
pure thought, is inadequate in two ways. He supposes, first, that the incomplete thought from which we
start is conceived to exist only in its incompleteness, and is intended to have as yet no actual relation to
the concrete reality to which it is afterwards to attain. In fact, he says, the process does depend on a
reference to concrete reality, but, in so far as this is so, the original attempt, which was to construct an
objectively valid dialectic by means of pure thought, has broken down. I shall try, however, to show that
such a relation to reality was in Hegels mind throughout, and that it leads to conclusions of objective
validity. If pure thought meant anything inconsistent with this, it would certainly be sterile. But there is
nothing in this which is inconsistent with pure thought, for the notion, as contained implicitly in reality
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and experience, is precisely of the same nature as the isolated piece which we begin by consciously
observing, though it is more complete.
And, secondly, Trendelenburg appears to think that thought, to be pure, must be perceived by itself, and
not in concrete experience, which always contains, along with pure thought, the complementary moment
of sensation. If this was the case, it would most certainly be sterile, or rather impossible. So far from one
category being able to transform itself, by the dialectic process, into another, no category could exist at
all. For all thought, as we have seen, requires something immediate on
which to act. But this need not prevent the dialectic process from being one of pure thought. As was
explained above the only part of experience from which the dialectic
process derives its cogency, and the only part which changes in it, is the element of pure thought,
although the dialectic process, like all other acts of reasoning, can only take place when the thought is
joined with sensation.
Whether the reference to experience in Hegels Logic destroys its claims to absolute and priori validity
will be discussed in the next chapter. At present we have to ask whether the appeal to experience is
inconsistent with the original intention of the dialectic, as Trendelenburg asserts, and whether it was only
used by Hegel because the absurdity of his original purpose drove him, more or less unconsciously, tomake such an appeal, or whether, on the other hand, it was all along an essential part of the system that it
should have such a relation to experience.
33. At the beginning of Section 6 of the Encyclopaedia Hegel says that at first we become aware of these
contents of philosophical knowledge in what we call experience. . . . As it is only in form that
philosophy is distinguished from other modes of obtaining an acquaintance with this same sum of being,
it must necessarily be in harmony with actuality and experience. This passage supports the view that
Hegel was conscious of the manner in which his dialectic rested on experience. For, even if it were
possible for philosophy to observe pure thought independently of experience, it is certain that other
means of obtaining an acquaintance with this same sum of being"science, namely, and common sense
have no field for their action except experience. It is no doubt the case that, as Hegel mentions in Section
8, philosophy has another circle of objects, which empirical knowledge does not embrace. These are
Freedom, Mind, and God. But, although philosophy deals with these conceptions, it does so, according
to Hegel, only by starting from empirical knowledge. It is, for example, only by the contemplation of the
finite objects perceived by the senses that we arrive at the knowledge of God. And, as we are now considering the basis, and not the extent, of philosophy,
the fact that we can rise to knowledge of that which is never represented in sensuous intuition is not to the
point.
34. Again, in Section 9, he points out that the method of empirical science exhibits two defects. The first
is that the Universal, or general principle contained in it, the genus or kind, &c., is of its own nature
indeterminate and vague, and therefore not on its own account connected with the Particular or the
details. Either is external and accidental to the other, and it is the same with the particular facts which arebrought into union: each is external and accidental to the others. The second defect is that the beginnings
are in every case data and postulates, neither accounted for nor deduced. In both these points the form of
necessity fails to get its due. Hence reflection, whenever it sets itself to remedy these defects, becomes
speculative thinking, the thinking proper to philosophy. Further on in the same section he says that the
relation of speculative science to the other sciences may be stated in the following terms. It does not in
the least neglect the empirical facts contained in the other sciences but recognises and adopts them: it
appreciates and applies towards its own structure the universal element in these sciences, their laws and
classifications; but besides all this, into the categories of science, it introduces, and gives currency to,
other categories. The difference looked at in this way is only a change of categories.
The method of philosophy then is separated by no difference of kind from the method of science, and
must therefore also deal with experience. It takes the materials of science, and carries further the process
of arrangement and analysis which science began. Whether, in doing so, it actually goes so far as to
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destroy the basis from which it started, is a question which will be considered later. The changes which it produces are in any case very extensive. Fresh categories are introduced, and
not merely as additions, but as altering materially the meaning of the categories of science which now
turn out to be abstract and of imperfect validity. The process must not be confounded with one which
should simply carry scientific generalisations up to the highest point, using only the categories of science,
and making the ordinary scientific presuppositions. The result may in one sense be said to differ from the
result of science in kind and not only in degree. But the method only differs in degree. The special
categories of philosophy are not introduced out of a pistol but are the necessary consequence of
reflection on the categories of science and the contradictions they display. And, if there is this continuity
between science and philosophy, we are placed in the dilemma of either supposing that Hegel imagined
science to be possible without experience, or admitting that for him the dialectic method, the method of
philosophy, also required experience as its presupposition.
35. The whole of Section 12 has a very important bearing on this question. The following extracts are
especially significant. Philosophy takes its departure from experience; including under that name both
our immediate consciousness and the inductions from it. Awakened, as it were, by this stimulus, thought
is vitally characterised by raising itself above the natural state of mind, above the senses and inferences
from the senses into its own unadulterated element, and by assuming, accordingly, at first a stand-aloofand negative attitude towards the point from which it draws its origin. And further on On the rel ation
between immediacy and mediation in consciousness ... here it may be sufficient to premise that, although
the two moments or factors present themselves as distinct, still neither of them can be absent, nor can
one exist apart from the other. Thus the knowledge of God (compare Section 1 "Truth, in that supreme
sense in which God and God only is the Truth") as of every supersensible reality, is in its true character
an exaltation above sensations or perceptions: it consequently involves a negative attitude to the initial
data of sense, and to that extent implies mediation. For to mediate is to take something as a beginning,
and to go onward to a second thing; so that the existence of this second thing depends on our having
reached it from something else contradistinguished from it. In spite of this the knowledge of God is
independent (selbststndig) and not a mere consequence of the empirical phase of consciousness; in fact,
its independence is essentially secured through this negation and exaltation. No doubt, if we attach anunfair prominence to the fact of mediation, and represent it as implying a state of conditionedness
(Bedingtheit), it may be said not that the remark would mean much that philosophy is the child of
experience, and owes its rise to an posteriori fact. (As a matter of fact, thinking is always the negation of
what we have immediately before us.) With as much truth however we may be said to owe eating to the
means of nourishment, so long as we can have no eating without them. If we take this view, eating is
certainly represented as ungrateful; it devours that to which it owes itself. Thinking, upon this view of its
action, is equally ungrateful. And again, In relation to the first abstract universality of thought there is a
correct and well-grounded sense in which we may say, that we may thank experience for the development
of philosophy. For, firstly, the empirical sciences do not stop short at the perception of the individual
features of a phenomenon. By the aid of thought, they come forward to meet philosophy with materials
for it, in the shape of general uniformities, i.e. laws and classifications of the phenomena. When this isdone, the particular facts which they contain are ready to be received into philosophy. This, secondly,
implies a certain compulsion on thought itself to proceed to these concrete specific truths. The reception
into philosophy of these scientific materials, now that thought has removed its immediacy, and made it
cease to be mere data, forms at the same time a development of thought out of itself. Philosophy then
owes its development to the empirical sciences. In return it gives their contents what is so vital to them,
the freedom of thought gives them, in short, an priori character. These contents are now warranted
necessary, and no longer depend on the evidence of facts merely, that they were so found and so
experienced. The fact of experience thus becomes an illustration and image of the original and completely
self-supporting activity of thought.
36. The peculiar importance of this section lies in the emphasis laid simultaneously on both the elements
of the dialectic process. On the one hand the start is definitely asserted, as in the quotation from Section 9,to be made from experience. On the other hand we are told that the result relates itself negatively towards
the point from which it draws its origin. This precludes on the one side the theory that Hegel endeavoured
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to produce the dialectic process by mere reflection on the nature of pure thought in abstraction, and, on
the other side, denies that a reference to experience involves a merely empirical argument. The reception
into philosophy of the material furnished by science is declared to be identical with the development of
thought out of itself. We are enabled also to understand correctly, by means of this Section, certain
expressions with regard to the dialectic process which are occasionally interpreted by critics as meaning
that the medium of the Logic is abstract pure thought. For example, here as in other places, Hegel
repudiates the idea that philosophy is a child of experience, and owes its existence to an posteriori
element. Such an idea, we are told, is unfair. Such expressions might lead us to reject the theory of the
dialectic offered above, if it was not for the explanation which here follows them. It is only unfair to say
this, Hegel continues, in the same sense in which it would be unfair to say that we owe eating to the
means of nourishment. Now it is unquestionable that, without something to eat, eating is impossible, and
if eating does not depend on the existence of something to eat, it follows that the existence of experience
may be indispensable to the existence of philosophy, although philosophy has been declared not to
depend on experience. Mediation, as Hegel uses the word, is not equivalent to dependence, and it is
possible for thought to require a mediation by sense, and therefore to be helpless without it, while it is
nevertheless, in Hegelian terminology, not in a state of dependence (Bedingtheit) on it. Without the data
which are supplied to us by sense, the dialectic could not exist. It is not, however, caused by those data,
but is necessarily combined with them in a higher unity. It is no more dependent on them than any other
abstraction from a whole is on its fellow abstractions from the same whole. Each step which it takes
depends, as we have seen, on the relation which the previous step bears to the goal of the process. The
whole process may thus fairly be said not to be dependent at all.
The independence of the idea of God is declared to rest on its negation and exaltation above the empirical
side of consciousness. This independence cannot possibly mean, therefore, the absence of all connection
between the two, for to be related to a thing even negatively, is, as Hegel himself points out on occasion
(as in his treatment of the ideas of finitude and infinity, Section 95), itself a condition, and in this sense a
dependence. The independence here can only consist in the fact that, although the beginning is in
experience, which contains an empirical side, yet in the result the idea of God is separated from the
particular empirical facts with which the process started, and is free from all likeness to them, althoughthey form its demonstration and justification. Whether this is possible or not, it appears to be this which
Hegel means in asserting his dialectic to be independent of all experience, and this is quite compatible
with an experiential basis.
It may be objected that in this Section Hegel is not speaking of his own system, but of the origin of
philosophy in general. It is, no doubt, true that the origin of philosophy from a historical standpoint is one
of the points discussed here. But if we look at Section 14, we shall find that the two questions are
considered by Hegel as identical. The same evolution of thought, he says, which is exhibited in the
history of philosophy is presented in the System of Philosophy itself. It is clear, therefore, that he regards
the process traced in Section 12 as one which is not only historically accurate but also philosophically
valid, and that he holds the relation of experience to the dialectic, which is there defined, as that which
really exists.
37. We find similar statements in his criticism of the Intuitionist School. In explaining their position, he
says (Section 70), What this theory asserts is that truth lies neither in the Idea as a merely subjective
thought, nor in mere being on its own account; that mere being per se, a being that is not of th